Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (asymmetrical)
12,197 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

M-mode, two-dimensional, and Doppler echocardiography were performed in 38 chronic renal failure (CRD) patients on conservative management, 35 patients on hemodialysis, and 36 matched controls. The controls were matched for age, sex, and comorbidities. The incidence of hypertension, left ventricular (LV) end diastolic volume, LV end systolic volume, and LV mass index were significantly higher in patients on hemodialysis compared to the controls. The LV parameters in the predialysis patients were not significantly different from the controls, except the LV end systolic internal dimensions were significantly higher in the CRF patients. Multiple regression analysis underscored the strong association between increase in LV mass index (LVMI) and hypertension. The diabetic patients with renal failure had large LV internal diameter and end diastolic volume compared to non-diabetics. Systolic function was well preserved even in hypertensive and diabetic patients with uremia. The incidence of diastolic dysfunction and asymmetrical septal hypertrophy were not significantly different in the three groups of patients.
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PMID:Left ventricular morphology in chronic renal failure by echocardiography. 941 37

Because obesity is a risk factor for many serious illnesses such as diabetes, better understandings of obesity and eating disorders have been attracting attention in neurobiology, psychiatry, and neuroeconomics. This paper presents future study directions by unifying (i) economic theory of addiction and obesity [4-6], and (ii) recent empirical findings in neuroeconomics and neurobiology of obesity and addiction. It is suggested that neurobiological substrates such as adiponectin, dopamine (D2 receptors), endocannabinoids, ghrelin, leptin, nesfatin-1, norepinephrine, orexin, oxytocin, serotonin, vasopressin, CCK, GLP-1, MCH, PYY, and stress hormones (e.g., CRF) in the brain (e.g., OFC, VTA, NAcc, and the hypothalamus) may determine parameters in the economic theory of obesity. Also, the importance of introducing time-inconsistent and gain/loss-asymmetrical temporal discounting (intertemporal choice) models based on Tsallis' statistics and incorporating time-perception parameters into the neuroeconomic theory is emphasized. Future directions in the application of the theory to studies in neuroeconomics and neuropsychiatry of obesity at the molecular level, which may help medical/psychopharmacological treatments of obesity (e.g., with sibutramine), are discussed.
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PMID:Toward molecular neuroeconomics of obesity. 2046 3